usage of satellite precipitation estimates by has forecasters at the west gulf rfc

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Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC Greg Story NWS/WGRFC HAS Forecaster 1

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Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC. Greg Story NWS/WGRFC HAS Forecaster. Introduction . The WGRFC needs accurate mean areal precipitation in real time to make good flood forecasts. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by

HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

Greg StoryNWS/WGRFC HAS Forecaster

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Page 2: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

Introduction

The WGRFC needs accurate mean areal precipitation in real time to make good flood forecasts.

The WGRFC uses the Multisensor Precipitation Estimator (MPE) program to derive mean areal precipitation

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Page 3: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

Introduction (cont.)

Problem: On the map on the left, we are responsible for deriving basin averaged areal precipitation for every location inside the red outline. As you can see, this is outside the range of the WSR-88D, and there are roughly 15 real-time rain gauges over this region. 3

Page 4: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

Introduction (cont.)

Problem: The HAS forecasters at the WGRFC must arrive at a 24 hour rainfall estimate for Mexican basins every day.

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Page 5: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

Satellite QPE is used where there is no dependable radar estimates or rain gauge data

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Page 6: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

Introduction (cont.) The primary source

of rainfall for this region is the satellite precipitation estimates (the hydroestimator) from NESDIS.

Problem: It is difficult to determine how accurate these estimates are!

Raw radar estimate from MPE program6

Page 7: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

Incorporating Satellite Estimates

Multi-sensor Mosaic Multi-sensor Mosaic and Satellite Estimates

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Page 8: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

Satellite Precipitation Estimates

The WGRFC uses the Hydro-Estimator, which is NESDIS’ operational algorithm for estimating rainfall rate from infrared (IR) window.

Estimates arrive via AWIPS and can be used in MPE (with or without local biasing).

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Page 9: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

Satellite Precipitation Estimates

IR Satellite Image SPE from Hydroestimator9

Page 10: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

In MPE we use a polygon edit to replace the default field with

any other field (like SPE)

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Page 11: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

We can insert Satellite QPE using polygons and it becomes our “best estimate field” there

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Page 12: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

There are times when the SPE’s are not good

Note the wave affectsof the SPE’s

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Page 13: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

Lack of SPE’s when there are lightning strikes

Note the lightning over northeast New Mexico

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Page 14: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

Lack of SPE’s when there are lightning strikes

The lightning and associated precipitation is in a location of poor radar coverage

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Page 15: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

Lack of SPE’s when there are lightning strikes

The associated precipitation on the hydro-estimator is blank where the lightning was noted

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Page 16: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

A Case Study

A flood of record occurred on the Rio Grande at Presidio, Texas in September,

2008. The flood waters started in

Mexico and moved downstream to

points including Big Bend National Park.

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Page 17: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

What set the Stage for Rio Grande Flooding?

First, there was hurricane Dolly which dissipated near Presidio July 24, 2008.

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Page 18: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

What set the Stage for Rio Grande Flooding?

Rainfall ending 12Z 26 July 2008 18

Page 19: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

What set the Stage for Rio Grande Flooding?

Rainfall for July 200819

Page 20: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

What set the Stage for Rio Grande Flooding?

Next came rain from tropical storm Julio from the Pacific in late August.

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Page 21: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

What set the Stage for Rio Grande Flooding?

Rainfall ending 12Z 31 August 2008 21

Page 22: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

What set the Stage for Rio Grande Flooding?

Rainfall for August 200822

Page 23: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

What set the Stage for Rio Grande Flooding?

Lastly, as Lake Luis Leon was starting to discharge, came rain from tropical storm Lowell from the Pacific in September.

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Page 24: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

What set the Stage for Rio Grande Flooding?

Rainfall ending 12Z 12 September 200824

Page 25: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

What set the Stage for Rio Grande Flooding?

Rainfall for September 2008 25

Page 26: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

The End Result

Using satellite precipitation estimates in the MPE software, we estimated between 5 and 12 inches of rain for the 30 day period ending on 17 September 2008

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Problem: Due to data constraints, we didn’t know

what affect the rain was having!

Lake Luis Leon in mid September 27

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Discharge from Lake Luis Leon

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Page 29: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

The Flood Wave hit Presidio Texas and Ojinaga Mexico producing the flood

of record

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1. The WGRFC HAS forecasters still don’t know exactly how much rain fell over Mexico. Only 15 rain gauges exist over that part of Mexico. 2. We look forward to the government of Mexico’s addition of new radars (by 2014).3. Best solution would be for improved satellite-based precipitation estimates. Could lightning data assist this effort?

Lessons Learned

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Page 31: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

Satellite Precipitation Estimates will likely remain the primary source of QPE over most of the Rio Conchos basin near Chihuahua and most of the Rio Grande tributaries in Mexico. We need to work more closely with the NESDIS meteorologists who are refining and working to improve satellite QPE.

Satellite QPE can also supplement hourly precipitation estimates in other locations where radar QPE is limited (far Southwest Texas, Southern Colorado and New Mexico)

Conclusion

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Page 32: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

Acknowledgements

• Billy Finn, Chief, Water Accounting Division, U.S. International Boundary & Water Commission, El Paso TX

• Lora Mueller, Hydrologic Focal Point, NWS WFO Midland TX (now with the NWS Headquarters)

• Jason Johnson, Senior Service Hydrologist, NWS WFO San Angelo TX

• Cary Carman, USGS, San Angelo TX• NPS, Big Bend National Park TX• Sheldon Kusselson, NESDIS, College Park MD.• Fellow staff members of WGRFC 32

Page 33: Usage of Satellite Precipitation Estimates by HAS Forecasters at the West Gulf RFC

Questions or Comments?

MPE Precipitation products are available on the web from the WGRFC:

http://water.weather.gov/precip

E-Mail: [email protected]

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